Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Summer Nature Day Camp with a Photographic Twist

This year the Friends of Tryon Creek added Nature Photography to their Adventure Camp series. For the first time ever, campers in grades 5 – 7 had the opportunity to spend their week of Nature Day Camp capturing the colors, textures and natural beauty of the park  and nearby environs using digital cameras.

With camp counselors "Fungi" & "Clover" leading the way, Nature Photography campers explored how to use light, composition, landscape photography, and close-ups in an effort to capture unique images. The experience was decidedly positive. As one excited camper reported, “I didn’t know the forest could be so beautiful!”

Over the course of the week campers hiked on numerous park trails and took field trips to Washington Park's Rose Garden and George Rogers Park, among other places. They covered a lot of ground on their expeditions and discovered a variety of flora, fauna and fungi. Snails and slugs were frequent subject material, as were the sweeping trunks of trees towering high above. Campers photographed the occasional bird, bright berries, colorful flowers, and the gnarled bark of some of Tryon Creek’s oldest trees.
At the end of the week, campers selected their favorite photos. We think they are remarkable and are pleased to share them with you:

"I chose my picture because I liked how carefully I had to use zoom, and how it was unique to the other pictures that my fellow campers chose." - Eliana

"I chose this duck picture because it looked best and because it was the only picture of my top five that had an animal in it." - Ethan
"I chose this picture because I like the vivid colors and detailed background. The colors remind me of a sunset and the rose is of a variety that are particularly lovely to me. This picture was taken at the Rose Garden at Washington Park." - Edme

"I chose my landscape picture because I like the relationship between the fern cluster and the logs and the creek. This picture was taken on a bridge over a creek in Tryon Creek State Natural Area." - Lucy

"This is a fern fiddlehead. I didn't expect to see one that was still curled up so late in spring, and it was really cool looking with all the tiny leaves in a spiral shape. The green color was also vibrant against the darker brown forest floor." - Anna
"I chose this photo out of my favorite five because I think it represents my mom. She's bright, blossomed and pretty. I also took the picture because my mom loves the color yellow. I took this photo at the Washington Park Rose Garden." - Selina

"I chose this photo as my favorite because of all the shades of green with the red spores on the fern at the center. It shows the textures of the different leaves and since the leaves overlap you can see through the fern. This picture was taken in the Shakespearean Garden of Washington Park." - Zoe

"I chose this photo because the grey in the stone and the green in the bushes and grass makes everything pop out. Also, it has a creepy graveyard theme with the rock color." - Lindsey

"I chose the picture of the flower because it had a cool spiral thingy on it and it was pink. I took the photo at Washington Park Rose Garden." - Logan
 
Summer Nature Day Camp campers engage directly with the natural world around them. This connection is a key element in cultivating a lifelong relationship with nature and with the Earth. The Friends of Tryon Creek believe that a healthy environment is essential for the wellbeing and sustainability of ecosystems and inhabitants and are pleased to provide opportunities for children, families and adults to connect with the natural world using Tryon Creek State Natural Area as a living classroom. 

For more information on the Friends’ Nature Day Camp Program please visit www.tryonfriends.org.

 

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

One Week Job's Linda Chase visits the Friends of Tryon Creek

Linda Chase spends Week 42 at Tryon Creek
For the past week Linda Chase has been working with the Friends of Tryon Creek. She is on Week 42 of working 52 jobs in 52 weeks. I sat down with Linda to learn more about the unorthodox path she took to working with the Friends. Here is a nutshell version of her story, as well as some of her words of wisdom…

Linda was born and raised in Santa Barbara, California (and she still yearns for the beach). After attending grad school at the University of Oregon, Linda moved to Portland with her partner Emmett in 1985. They had two children, Laura, who is now 23, and Alec who is 21.

Linda worked in the nonprofit world until getting laid off when the economic downturn hit. She found herself unemployed “for too long” and facing a number of crises, including the loss of her partner to brain cancer; her dog losing a leg to cancer; and her house facing foreclosure. Linda decided to pay her mother a visit in Santa Barbara. On the return flight to Portland she found herself sitting next to Sean Aiken, a dynamic young man sporting dreadlocks.

Sean shared his story about graduating from college and not knowing what he wanted to do with his life. He created the One-Week Job Project, working 52 jobs in 52 weeks in Canada to find his passion and ideal career. Sean and Linda concluded that Linda’s experience was the middle-aged American version of Sean’s. By the end of the flight the two agreed to collaborate on a similar project for Linda.
Initially, Linda thought she might take her 52-week challenge “to follow her passion” to other regions. She realized that her passions – her children (“her heart”), nature, and her animals – were in Portland. This is where she decided to concentrate her effort.

For the past 42 weeks Linda has worked at an incredible variety of different jobs. From working with Guide Dogs for the Blind (a true highlight, for, as Linda observes, “your heart melts seeing a service dog providing such great help to a person”) to helping the owner of Cascade Naturals make tempeh burgers by hand  (the owner is the sole employee and she works 14 hours a day creating a product she loves), Linda has grown and benefited from the experience. What has she learned?

·         Ninety-nine percent of the people she’s worked with love their jobs. This was unexpected.

·         “If it’s not fun, what is the point?” (This realization is beautifully captured in Linda’s blog, “My Song and Dance”.)

·         The greatest discovery she has made was realizing the importance of nurturing a sense of wonder in life: “It is an important part of life, of staying young, and staying engaged in the world around us.”
Linda also shared some advice for finding a path with fulfillment: “Talk to people who do what you love to do and find out how they got started. Spend time with them. Find out if it’s really what you want to do.”

Linda has enjoyed her time working at Tryon Creek and engaging with nature. Spending time at the park has energized her “passion for being green and fostering green spaces and being around people that advocate for the environment. It’s wonderful to get out of the car and be in nature, to experience the wonderful sights, sounds and smells of Tryon Creek State Natural Area.”
What does Linda have in store next? “I don’t know. I’m going to experience things on a weekly basis and it is changing every week…it’s important that there be camaraderie among the team I work with, a connection, chemistry, and a sense of kinship.”

We at Tryon Creek greatly enjoyed having Linda be part of our community. She is inspiring and engaging, and we wish her well on whatever path she chooses next. To learn more about her past and future adventures please visit One Week Job.

-Jessica Sweeney